This study traces the emergence ofthe ego/self idea in Buddhist experience-based and process- oriented thinking (rDzogs-chen). This is thinking that is primarily concerned with understanding and less so with establishing and being satisfied with a theoretical system, one that inevitably remains reductionist and, for this reason, fails to explain or make sense of what matters most to any living system-such as a human being. Because of its dynamic character, r Dzogs-chen thinking avoids the pitfall of concretizing the cognitive aspect of the living, variously called a mind, consciousness, ego or self, into some homuncular entity, and of assuming this entity to reside in one's head as a kind of passive spectator. Not only did Buddhist thinking in general, and r Dzogs-chen thinking in particular, conceive of "mind" or "consciousness" as a complexity off unctions reacting and responding to each other and forming together the idea of an ego/self, but also, in this respect, it anticipated and antedated the findings of modern phenomenology with its differentiation into an ego/self (in small letters) as a limitation of the Self (with a capital letter ) that is neither egocentric nor egological nor logocentric. In rDzogs-chen thought even the Self is a barrier that has to be overcome in order to become ek-statically open. You haf too much Ego in your Cosmos. -Rudyard Kiplin
CITATION STYLE
Guenther, H. (2001). The Emergence of the Ego/Self Complementarity and Its Beyond. International Journal of Transpersonal Studies, 20(1), 19–32. https://doi.org/10.24972/ijts.2001.20.1.19
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